Kodak EasyShare C533 5MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom
Details
- Availability:
- Usually ships in 1-2 business days
- List Price:
- $109.95
- Our Price:
- $249.95
- Savings:
- -127%
- Average Customer Rating:
- 3.5 out of 5
- Manufacturer:
- Kodak
Ready to Buy?
- List Price:
- $109.95
- Our Price:
- $249.95
Features
- 5.0-megapixel resolution captures enough detail for photo-quality 13 x 17-inch prints
- 3x optical zoom; 1.8-inch LCD display
- Includes 13 programmed scene and 3 color modes
- In-camera picture-enhancing features include cropping, auto picture rotation, and undo-deletet
- Powered by 2 AA-size batteries (2 batteries included); stores images on SD memory cards (includes 16 MB internal memory)
Description
Box Contents: Easyshare C533 Zoom Digital Camera, Oxy-Alkaline camera battery, USB cable, wrist strap, custom camera insert, Kodak Easyshare software, Getting Started Kit
The Kodak Easyshare C533 Zoom Digital Camera lives up to your love of taking pictures. The 5.0 MP delivers exceptional quality prints with bright, beautiful color. The 3x optical zoom and 5x digital zoom gets you closer to the subject without sacrficing image quality. Scene and color modes make it easy to take stunning shots; you can also capture video and audio in continuous VGA (640 x 480). The point-and-shoot simplicity makes getting your best shot as simple as clicking a button. Aperture - f/4.8 @ wide; f/8.5 @ tele Shutter Speed - 4-1/1400 sec. Continuous video recording, amount based on memory capacity (QuickTime) Video resolution - VGA (640 x 480) @ 11 fps; QVGA (320 x 240) @ 20 fps Capture Modes - Auto, Portrait, Sport, Landscape, Night Portrait, Snow, Beach, Fireworks, Backlight, Children, Party, Close-Up Color Modes - Color, Sepia, Black & White White balance - Auto, Daylight, Tungsten, Fluorescent Built-in flash - Auto, fill, red eye, off Editing features - On-camera cropping, undo-delete Share features - Print, print all, e-mail, Favorites, cancel prints 16MB internal memory SD/MMC expansion card slot Pictbridge compatible Self-timer - 10 sec, 2 sec, 2 shots Works with Photo Printer 500, Printer Dock Series 3 & Camera Dock Series 3 Built-in lens barrier 1/4 standard tripod mount Dimensions(WxHxD) - 3.7 ? 2.6 ? 1.4 (91 ? 66 ? 35 mm) Weight - 5.3 oz. (150 g) without batteries
Spotlight customer reviews
I love this camera
[ Posted: 2008-11-10 ]
i have had mine for almost two years now. i love it! i'm a fan of the college hockey team where i live and i use my camera to take action shots while the team is playing and also use it to take pictures of my niece and nephews. it works great indoors and outdoors. i esp. like the sports and children feature!
messed up
[ Posted: 2008-09-14 ]
It came in a timely fashion but when i got it out to use it something inside is broken and rattles in there. the share button does not work so i have to manually put them all the computer mmyself.
kodak still in the dark ages
[ Posted: 2008-08-15 ]
Well, others have had their say, so let me just add this. How can anyone in the 21st century make a camera that can't be used as though it were a usb disk drive. My first kodak digital camera was this dumb, but now, 10 years later I see these fools still don't understand how the rest of the world works. I don't want to have to install their stupid software, what if I'm not at home and want to load my pics on another machine. I guess I have to carry around an sd card reader.
Also, 1.45 volt alkaline batteries wouldn't even turn this puppy on. I had to use brand new 1.55 volt batteries. I'm thinking of returning this if I can since, naturally none of my 1.25-1.35 volt nimh rechargeables would work either.
Just to be sure, I put the 1.45 batteries into a standard 2 D cell flashlight (by using AA to D adapter shells) and it's as bright as anything brand new. And if you know flashlights you know the brightness is a very good measure of how much voltage the batteries can put out when in a circuit - even better than using a meter, unless you put a load on or use a special battery circuit with a load. So, if batteries this good won't even budge this camera, then forgetaboutit!
After trying many batteries, it is possible that this is just my camera, but other's seem to have had the same problems. So, I can't say if this is an un-feature of this camera, or if mine is just overly sensitive to the input voltage.
Oh, one more issue. They keep mentioning an a/v out, but there really isn't one. They imply you can hook directly to a tv, but you can't. All there is is a usb port, so you'd still have to install their software, and use that to transfer the files (instead of simply drag/drop) and then if you have a tv that can hook up to a computer, then you could show the pictures or videos on the tv. They act like you can just hook up a pair of a/v cables to the camera and the tv. I'd have to say someone screwed da pooch here. I don't think they are referring to the docking station connector either, as that is not where they point and say a/v out in the manual. The manual also says that it outputs either ntsc or pal. Either way, I can't find out how and they don't show any pictures of any a/v outputs.
I bought this here for a low price of under $60 and even then I wouldn't buy it had I known better.
unreliable
[ Posted: 2008-08-14 ]
I bought one of these C533's to take to Africa 3 years ago. During my stay it stopped functioning and I couldn't get it replaced until I got back and then had to wait nearly a month for the replacement. Fortunately I was able to save the photos, its the camera's ability to focus and read an image that is unstable. Last week I was visiting my son in San Francisco and we went to a Giants/Dodgers game and darn if the same thing didn't happen again. I am not abusive to my technology, I try to keep it clean and safe from bumps and moisture.
I would not recommend this product. It is easy to use until it unpredictably won't work. There is an Australian joke that goes
Q: What do you call a boomerang that won't come back?
A: A stick
I just bought a Canon A470 for $110 that will do everything the C533 will do for significantly less. hopefully it is more reliable
Died immediately after warranty expiration...of course
[ Posted: 2008-05-19 ]
The camera came with a poor excuse for a rechargeable battery pack. A full charge would handle shooting no more than a dozen to maybe a dozen and a half pictures. It didn't take me long to start using Duracells.
Shortly after I'd had the camera a year, and of course shortly after it went out of warranty, it quit working. It soured me enough that it will NOT be replaced a Kodak anything.